A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

  First | 1 2 3        [Sort by number of followers]   [Restore default list]

  Subjects -> SOCIOLOGY (Total: 553 journals)
Showing 401 - 382 of 382 Journals sorted alphabetically
Tla-Melaua : Revista de Ciencias Sociales     Open Access  
Tracés     Open Access  
Trajecta : Religion, Culture and Society in the Low Countries     Open Access  
Transatlantica     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Transmotion     Open Access   (Followers: 14)
Transposition : Musique et sciences sociales     Open Access   (Followers: 1)
Travail et Emploi     Open Access   (Followers: 5)
TRIM. Tordesillas : Revista de investigación multidisciplinar     Open Access  
Universidad, Escuela y Sociedad     Open Access  
Unoesc & Ciência - ACHS     Open Access  
Urban Research & Practice     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 23)
Valuation Studies     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Variations : Revue Internationale de Théorie Critique     Open Access   (Followers: 1)
Visitor Studies     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 4)
Vlast' (The Authority)     Open Access  
Work, Aging and Retirement     Open Access   (Followers: 4)
World Future Review     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1)
Zeitschrift für Religion, Gesellschaft und Politik     Hybrid Journal  

  First | 1 2 3        [Sort by number of followers]   [Restore default list]

Similar Journals
Journal Cover
Sociolinguistic Studies
Number of Followers: 8  
 
  Hybrid Journal Hybrid journal (It can contain Open Access articles)
ISSN (Print) 1750-8649 - ISSN (Online) 1750-8657
This journal is no longer being updated because:
    the publisher no longer provides RSS feeds
  • The nexus of Family Language Policy

    • Free pre-print version: Loading...

      Authors: Lyn Wright
      Pages: 7 - 10
      Abstract: Three decades of research on reversing language shift, bi- and multilingual parenting, and Family Language Policy (FLP) have demonstrated that, while parental language practices and ideologies are important factors in determining children’s language competencies and outcomes, parents do not exist in a vacuum. Family language policies are influenced by a myriad of sociohistorical and relational processes that are examined in depth in this special issue. The articles here capture the reality of the complexities of FLP by examining family-external factors such as the COVID-19 lockdown, access to digital communication, geography and community, migration histories, national language policies, and family structures among others, to explain the particular family language policies present in communities around the world (from Iran to Cyprus to Northern Ireland) and their effects on children’s language outcomes and family members’ linguistic experiences.
      Keywords: Foreword ; Family members at the epicentre of policy discourses

      • Free pre-print version: Loading...

        Authors: Anik Nandi, Anastassia Zabrodskaja
        Pages: 11 - 26
        Abstract: The articles in this thematic issue of Sociolinguistic Studies, ‘Family as a language policy regime: Agency, negotiation and local practices’, are concerned with the impact of family (language policy) among the minority population, whether indigenous or otherwise, on the sociolinguistic makeup of the contemporary policy regimes worldwide. Although family language policy is already a well-established domain of inquiry, this issue points to the wide range of cases from around the world, including Cyprus, Estonia, Germany, Iran, Lithuania, Northern Ireland, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and Zimbabwe, to understand how (individual) pathways are formed and choices made in favour of language and cultural maintenance. While covering a wide range of factors and perspectives that contribute to our understanding of families’ linguistic behaviour and the broader social implications of the discipline, these papers emphasise the complex relationships between language, culture, politics, and socioeconomic factors in today’s global multilingual and multicultural mosaic. This edition further underlines a number of present-day requirements in the field, such as being able to examine children’s or extended family members’ agency, use of digital technologies for language maintenance, different forms of parental language planning and activism to mention a few. The collection has emerged in the wake of a symposium ‘Family as a language policy regime: Agency, practices and negotiation’ at the 20th AILA World Congress (19–20 July, 2023, Lyon, France) and a closed call for papers.
        Keywords: Guest Editorial ; Family Language Policy

        • Free pre-print version: Loading...

          Authors: Xiao Lan Curdt-Christiansen
          Pages: 223 - 228
          Abstract: This commentary outlines the key contributions of the issue. Addressing various language attitudes and ideologies held by family members, the commentary highlights the major themes of the collected articles, addressing important issues in the maintenance of home languages and development of minoritised languages as well as interactions between families and the wider society. In particular, it looks into why heritage and minoritised languages are difficult to maintain and develop in multilingual contexts. The commentary emphasises how families constantly interact with broader sociocultural, sociohistorical, and sociopolitical contexts and outlines the agentive role of family members in accommodating or resisting language change. It highlights the key topics, theoretical contributions, and methodological issues in this issue.
          Keywords: Articles ; Family Language Policy in the Polish Diaspora: A Focus on Australia, Piotr
                 Romanowski (2021)

          • Free pre-print version: Loading...

            Authors: Angie Baily
            Pages: 249 - 254
            Abstract: Family Language Policy in the Polish Diaspora: A Focus on Australia
            Piotr Romanowski (2021)
            New York: Routledge, Taylor and Francis. Pp. 246
            ISBN: 9780367706449 (hbk)
            ISBN: 9780367706487 (pbk)
            ISBN: 9781003147343 (eBook)
            Keywords: Book Reviews ; Epistemological and Theoretical Foundations in Language Policy and
                   Planning, Michele Gazzola, Federico Gobbo, David Cassels Johnson, and
                   Jorge Antonio Leoni de León (2023)

            • Free pre-print version: Loading...

              Authors: Iker Erdocia
              Pages: 281 - 288
              Abstract: Epistemological and Theoretical Foundations in Language Policy and Planning
              Michele Gazzola, Federico Gobbo, David Cassels Johnson, and Jorge Antonio Leoni de León (2023)
              Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. 144
              ISBN: 978-3031223143 (hbk)
              ISBN: 978-3-031-22315-0 (eBook)
              Keywords: Book Reviews ; Multilingual Families in a Digital Age: Mediational Repertoires and
                     Transnational Practices, Kristin Vold Lexander and Jannis Androutsopoulos
                     (2023)

              • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                Authors: Mahdi Mowlaei Aghblagh
                Pages: 289 - 298
                Abstract: Multilingual Families in a Digital Age: Mediational Repertoires and Transnational Practices
                Kristin Vold Lexander and Jannis Androutsopoulos (2023)
                New York: Routledge. Pp. 252
                ISBN: 9781032130248 (hbk)
                ISBN: 9781003227311 (ebk)
                Keywords: Book Reviews ; Gender and sexuality in African discourses

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Daniel Yaw Fiaveh, Eyo Mensah
                  Pages: 7 - 19
                  Abstract: This issue examines the role of language and/or cultural expression in discourses around gender and sexuality. We explore the expressions used to describe people in relation to their gender and sexual configurations and practices. The contributions are from scholars writing from West and Eastern African perspectives, and the findings are useful for ongoing discourse and for informing policy direction. We first present an introduction to this issue, where we highlight the problematic areas of gender and sexuality research in Africa and the aim of the study, taking into consideration how spaces in language expressions make us gendered and sexual beings. We also discuss some historical research trajectories in African sexuality, followed by some future prospects. We conclude with a brief overview of each of the papers in the issue.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24323
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • LGBQ+ in Ghana

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Daniel Yaw Fiaveh
                  Pages: 21 - 43
                  Abstract: This article offers an original analysis of the sociocultural and political situation of same-sex (LGB) and queer (Q) people in Ghana, especially in the context of political repression. There is a lack of literature on Ghana’s LGBQ politics in various edited collections on African sexualities, so this article fills the gap from anthropological and sociological perspectives, emphasising the cultural-sociolinguistic nuances of gender and sex as well as the politics of same-sex and the contradictions in them. Drawing on personal biographies and media reports of power dynamics in local and (post)colonial frames of reference to LGBQ rights, I argue that regardless of the cultural and moral antics in local politics that bedevil the LGBQ community, LGBQ rights cannot achieve any enduring success if discourse continues to be spearheaded by the West since the devil is in the details. Therefore, the need to reconsider the role of the West in local discourse about LGBQ rights and to promote narratives that highlight indigenous cultural and character strengths (e.g., neighbourliness, love, work ethic, hard work, philanthropy, and honesty) in celebrating diversity and individual expression has never been more imperative. This could be a critical mass to revolutionise Ghanaian queerness and related West African homophobic and xenophobic behaviour. At the same time, the queer and LGB communities should be sensitive to the cultural milieu in which they operate and rethink ways of organising because culture and the moral community can be agentic depending upon knowledge pathways and continued resistance may lead to backlash.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24050
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • Same-sex relationships and recriminalisation of homosexuality in Ghana

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Ernest Yaw Ako
                  Pages: 45 - 65
                  Abstract: Most Ghanaians conveniently ignore or vehemently deny the existence of homosexual relationships in precolonial Ghanaian cultures. The denial of these relationships in precolonial Ghanaian cultures has gained attention due to section 104 of the Criminal Offences Act of Ghana which criminalises ‘unnatural carnal knowledge’ and the ‘promotion of proper human sexual rights and Ghanaian family values bill, 2021’ (anti-LGBTQI+ bill), currently being debated in Ghana’s Parliament. Historical evidence suggests, however, that Western European researchers who first visited Africa and Ghana suppressed evidence of homosexuality, while indigenous people unwittingly concealed homosexual relationships because of a ‘culture of silence’ surrounding sex and sexuality in precolonial Ghana. From a decolonial theoretical perspective, this article argues that the non-appreciation of precolonial Ghanaian (homo)sexual history partly accounts for the criminalisation of same-sex sexual relationships, homophobia, violence, and violations of the rights of sexual minorities in contemporary Ghana. The paper connects the presence of same-sex sexual intimacies in the Gold Coast (now Ghana), and the absence of criminal sanctions as a basis for rethinking current attempts in Parliament to recriminalise homosexual relationships, in order to chart a path of the equal legal protection of every person, regardless of their sexual orientation.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24077
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • ‘Chips Funga’

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Daniel Ochieng Orwenjo
                  Pages: 67 - 95
                  Abstract: Like other young people, and indeed everyone all over the world, Kenyan university students find reasons to talk about sex and sexual intercourse. In doing this, they naturally find themselves constrained by the societal dictates, which preclude direct reference within the sexual domain, thereby restricting themselves to the creative, euphemistic, and periphrastic terms. This article reports the findings of a study conducted to determine how Kenyan university students, in their efforts to engage in sexual discourse, circumvent such societal and cultural dictates, which prohibit direct sexual reference. Using a Sexual Synonyms Scale (SSS) as the main research instrument, this study surveys how lexical choices in sexual discourse shift in different contexts. The study adopts the tenets of Cognitive Sociolinguistics to attempt to understand why Kenyan university students make the lexical choices regarding sexual discourse they do. The study reports that lexical choices in sexual discourse is constrained by various sociological, demographic, and linguistic factors. It is further argued that an understanding of how young people view sexual intercourse is reflected in the lexical choices that they make as they talk about their daily sexual exploits, aspirations, and fantasies.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24049
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • Language of the sexes, female identity, and exclusion among the Ubang
                       people of Obudu, Southeastern Nigeria

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Liwhu Betiang
                  Pages: 97 - 117
                  Abstract: Language is the ‘seed of culture’ and has been used variously for character construction in literature and the performing arts, and as a signifier of social identity. But when ‘gendered’ as in the Ubang linguistic context, it becomes a cultural construct to mark sexuality and cultural exclusion/inclusion. The Ubang people of Obudu, Cross River State, in southeastern Nigeria are famed for their unique ‘language of the sexes’ where the male child grows up speaking the ‘male language’ of the father, while the female speaks the ‘female language’ of the mother within the same sociocultural environment. This linguistic phenomenon draws attention to ingenious uses and possibilities of language beyond traditional usage. Using participatory methods of theatre-for-development, personal observations and key informant/interviewing among participants in the indigenous Ubang community, qualitative analysis of data shows that while ‘language of the sexes’ is used to define sexuality and appropriate gender/cultural roles, and even though both sexes cross-communicate, the ‘male language’ in Ubang is also strongly related to the patriarchal cult of masculinity which tends to exclude the female. The study concludes that the female variant of the language, which needs preservation, may also be a counter-cultural tool used by women against social segregation and gender exclusion in the Ubang community.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24066
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • Intergender communication as intralingual translation in Ubang,
                       Southeastern Nigeria

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Samson Nzuanke
                  Pages: 119 - 140
                  Abstract: The Ubang language in Obudu, Southeastern Nigeria, is asymmetric because communication among males and females or between them flows through two distinct linguistic codes. This phenomenon tends to challenge the nature of occurrence and use of language(s) in any given community. Is it a natural or a societal phenomenon' How does such intergender communication occur' To seek responses to these questions, this study sets out to interrogate the nature of male-female discourse in Ubang by observing 18 Ubang language speakers (nine males and nine females) in naturally occurring communication in their physical environment and analyzing their conversations using Peircean semiotics, the interpretative theory of translation and Susan Petrilli’s (2003) tripod of intralingual translation. It was discovered that male-female communication in Ubang is more a function of intralingual translation.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24059
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • Language, fiction, and heteropatriarchal critique in selected recent
                       Ugandan short fiction

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Edgar Fred Nabutanyi
                  Pages: 141 - 158
                  Abstract: There is an emerging Ugandan queer writing tradition that adopts an activist stance to imagine an alternative Ugandan queer subjecthood beyond popular and polarising perspectives of this subjectivity that were instantiated by the Anti-Homosexuality Act of 2014. This emerging archive of Ugandan writing, often deploying the short fiction genre, weaves intricate tales of queer Uganda that sidestep the censorship of an ostracised sexuality deemed sinful, dangerous, and unUgandan to claim the agency and humanity of Ugandan homosexuals. While this archive of Ugandan queer short fiction has attracted significant critical attention from scholars such as Edgar Fred Nabutanyi (2017, 2018), Ken Junior Lipenga (2014) and Ben de Souza (2020), who focus on the political activism of these texts in Ugandan sexuality debates, little critical attention has been paid to how writers deploy sociolinguistic tools to empower their characters to author their agency and life experiences as same-sex loving Ugandans. Using sociolinguistic discursive tools, I refer to a textuality that includes illocutionary techniques such as letter writing, dialogue, and stream of consciousness that subversively empower excluded and muted subjects to articulate their essence and humanity. Deploying textual analysis of selected short stories, their analyses, and Ugandan queer theoretical treatises, I read Monica Arac de Nyeko’s ‘Jambula tree’ (2006) Beatrice Lamwaka’s ‘Pillar of love’ (2016) and Anthea Paleo’s ‘Picture frame’ (2013) using a sociolinguistic lens to unveil how the selected writers’ subversion of patriarchal tropes of an amorous letter, an ideal heterosexual family, and a romantic date critique the ostracisation of a sexual orientation.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23998
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • Negotiating body, sex, and self-fashioning in Fújì music

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Stephen Olabanji Boluwaduro
                  Pages: 159 - 179
                  Abstract: A growing body of literature interrogating the voluptuous rendering of human sexuality in popular culture has focused on sex scripting in Western films and the commodification of women and their representations in popular media. However, exploration of how linguistic metaphors and innuendoes are deployed to affirm or contest expressions of desires that are sacred, sensitive, or taboo in Fuji music has received little scholarly attention. Of what significance is contesting social structure on sexuality to Fuji as a Nigerian popular musical genre' This empirical study explores this question while drawing on an ethnographic and interpretive literary analysis. Drawing from Hakim’s notion of ‘erotic capital’, the analyses and discussion operationalize the sexual scripting framework, Black feminist thought, and African/Black revolutionary art. I argue that sexual narratives and connotations in Fuji performance are often generated as powerful resources to contest sexual sensitivity and push back on silence on sexuality, negotiate and solicit artistic identity, and exact influence on public conversations on sexuality. By and large, this article affirms the engagement of sensual lyrical content as constitutive of revolutionary art and a social transformative site in which the body is negotiated as a catalyst for sexonomics in the contemporary ‘ear-tearing pant-and-bra’ musical evocations.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24125
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • ‘It’s not all about spreading one’s legs’

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Eyo Mensah, Utomobong Nsebot, Eyamba Mensah, Lucy Ushuple, Romanus Aboh
                  Pages: 181 - 203
                  Abstract: This article explores the layers of signification and interpretive frames of female adolescents’ nuanced experiences of virginity loss in heterosexual relationships in Akpabuyo and Bakassi Local Government Areas of Cross River State in southeastern Nigeria. This study is theoretically anchored in the social constructionist perspective of doing gender, which conceptualises it as a routine accomplishment embedded in everyday interaction. Drawing on qualitative data using semi-structured interviews with 25 female adolescents who were purposively sampled, we investigate the social, cultural, and structural factors that informed participants’ sexual debut and romantic life trajectories from their nuanced perspectives and experiences. We investigate virginity-based discursive subjectivities under three thematic tropes: coercive/consensual sex, stigma, and patriarchal affordances. The results, based on linguistic evidence, show that participants have ambivalent perceptions of virginity loss and/or preservation: while some were overwhelmed with guilt and tended to align with traditional prescriptions about female sexuality, others viewed it as an extension of patriarchal subjugation of women and interpreted their experience in terms of agency and resistance. In this way, virginity loss discourses provide a prominent site for doing or undoing gender. The study recommends intervention programmes for young rural women to reduce the risk of unplanned pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and HIV/AIDS acquisition as a result of their lack of sexual competence, economic security, and educational empowerment, which have contributed to their vulnerability, victimhood, and exposure to unhealthy sexual practices.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24048
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • Bible translation and lexical elaboration

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Uchenna Oyali
                  Pages: 205 - 228
                  Abstract: This study investigates how the translation of the word ‘virgin’ in the Igbo Bible has expanded the Igbo lexicon and how this lexical enrichment has spread among Igbo speakers. Although prior to their encounter with Christian missionaries in the 19th century and the subsequent translation of the Bible into Igbo, Igbo people had words that referred to virgin, these words were polysemous as they were also used for young and unmarried persons. In the course of translating the Bible into Igbo, Christian missionaries transferred the biblical euphemism for sex, ‘to know’, into the Igbo Bible and used same to innovate terms for ‘virgin’, thereby distinguishing a virgin from an unmarried or young person who might have had sex. Adapting the concept of language elaboration, this study analyses the lexical processes involved in creating these new terms. Then it presents findings from a questionnaire survey on the spread of the innovated terms among Igbo speakers. The survey findings demonstrate that the biblical innovations have not only spread among Igbo speakers but also became a springboard for further lexical innovations. This article accentuates the impact of Bible translation in reshaping the Igbo language. It also reveals the involvement of the language users in the process of language change.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24055
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • ‘I am the daughter of a man’

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Charles Prempeh
                  Pages: 229 - 251
                  Abstract: The purpose of this article is to discuss the cultural creativity that Nana Kofi Abuna V, the Chief of Essipun Traditional Area in the Western Region of Ghana, is investing in transgressing gender boundaries as a woman chief. Deploying an ethnographic research approach and biographical narrative, feminism as a methodological framework, I argue that Nana is breaking the boundaries of gender to chart new pathways as a woman chief. Nana is one of the few women chiefs in contemporary Ghana. Nana’s ascent to the stool as a chief diverges from the ‘conventional’ practice of male political rule in Akan traditional societies. Since Nana is a woman who bears a male name (Kofi), she acts as a male chief of her Traditional Area. But as a deaconess (church officer) of the Church of Pentecost (CoP), Ghana’s largest Protestant denomination, Nana did not submit to the performance of the rituals of chieftaincy during her installation. Similarly, Nana’s Pentecostal leaning does not permit her to perform ‘chiefship’ rituals. This goes contrary to the centrality of Akan chieftaincy as an ancestral cult and its attendant rituals. Nana, as a Pentecostal woman chief, therefore, breaks through culturally-induced gender boundaries to perform chiefship roles.
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24052
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Script effects as the hidden drive of the mind, cognition, and
                       culture' Hye K. Pae (2020)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Gulbahar H. Beckett
                  Pages: 253 - 268
                  Abstract: Script effects as the hidden drive of the mind, cognition, and culture
                  Hye K. Pae (2020)
                  Cham, Switzerland: Springer. Pp. 267
                  ISSN 2214-0018 (electronic)
                  ISBN 978-3-030-55151-3 (eBook)
                  ISBN 978-3-030-55152-0 (eBook)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23457
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Rethinking language policy' Bernard Spolsky (2021)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Josep Soler
                  Pages: 269 - 277
                  Abstract: Rethinking language policy
                  Bernard Spolsky (2021)
                  Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Pp. 272
                  ISBN: 978 1 4744 8546 3 (ppb)
                  ISBN: 978 1 4744 8548 7 (ebook, PDF)
                  ISBN: 978 1 4744 8549 4 (ebook EPUB)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23683
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Multilingual Singapore: Language policies and linguistic realities' Ritu
                       Jain (ed.) (2021)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Maya Khemlani David
                  Pages: 279 - 288
                  Abstract: Multilingual Singapore: Language policies and linguistic realities
                  Ritu Jain (ed.) (2021)
                  Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. Pp. 224
                  ISBN: 978-0-367-23519-2 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 978-1-032-00043-5 (pbk)
                  ISBN: 978-0-429-28014-6 (ebk)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23288
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Graphic politics in Eastern India: Script and the quest for autonomy'
                       Nishaant Choksi (2021)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Rizwan Ahmad
                  Pages: 289 - 293
                  Abstract: Graphic politics in Eastern India: Script and the quest for autonomy
                  Nishaant Choksi (2021)
                  London: Bloomsbury Academic. Pp. 224
                  ISBN: 9781350215924 (pbk)
                  ISBN: 9781350159587 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9781350159594 (Ebook)
                  ISBN: 9781350159600 (Epub)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23360
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Transcultural voices: Narrating Hip Hop culture in complex Delhi' Jaspal
                       Naveel Singh (2021)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Katy Highet
                  Pages: 295 - 299
                  Abstract: Transcultural voices: Narrating Hip Hop culture in complex Delhi
                  Jaspal Naveel Singh (2021)
                  Bristol: Multilingual Matters. Pp. 328
                  ISBN: 9781800413818 (pbk)
                  ISBN: 9781788928137 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9781788928144 (eBook)
                  ISBN: 9781788928151 (EPUB)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24311
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Language in a globalised world: Social justice perspectives on mobility
                       and contact' Khawla Badwan (2021)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Jiayi Xiao, Weiping Wu
                  Pages: 301 - 306
                  Abstract: Language in a globalised world: Social justice perspectives on mobility and contact
                  Khawla Badwan (2021)
                  Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp 230
                  ISBN: 9783030770860 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9783030770891 (pbk)
                  ISBN: 9783030770877 (eBook)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.24633
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Sociolinguistic variation and language acquisition across the lifespan'
                       Anna Ghimenton, Aurélie Nardy, and Jean-Pierre Chevrot (eds) (2021)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Hung Phu Bui, Huy Van Nguyen
                  Pages: 307 - 311
                  Abstract: Sociolinguistic variation and language acquisition across the lifespan
                  Anna Ghimenton, Aurélie Nardy, and Jean-Pierre Chevrot (eds) (2021)
                  Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Pp 319
                  ISBN: 9789027209078 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9789027259752 (eBook)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23759
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Urban contact dialects and language change: Insights from the Global
                       North and South Paul' Kerswill and Heike Wiese (eds) (2022)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Sangeeta Bagga-Gupta
                  Pages: 313 - 319
                  Abstract: Urban contact dialects and language change: Insights from the Global North and South
                  Paul Kerswill and Heike Wiese (eds) (2022)
                  New York: Routledge. Pp. 368
                  ISBN: 9781138596092 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9780429487958 (eBook)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23728
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Professional development in Applied Linguistics: A guide to success for
                       graduate students and early career faculty' Luke Plonsky (ed.) (2020)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Zichen Guan
                  Pages: 321 - 326
                  Abstract: Professional development in Applied Linguistics: A guide to success for graduate students and early career faculty
                  Luke Plonsky (ed.) (2020)
                  Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Pp. 204
                  ISBN: 9789027207111 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9789027207128 (pbk)
                  ISBN: 9789027260970 (eBook)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23217
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Language Corpora annotation and processing' Niladri Sekhar Dash
                       (2021)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Selvaraj Arulmozi
                  Pages: 327 - 331
                  Abstract: Language Corpora annotation and processing
                  Niladri Sekhar Dash (2021)
                  Singapore: Springer Nature. Pp. 272
                  ISBN: 9789811629624 (pbk)
                  ISBN: 9789811629594 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9789811629600 (eBook)
                  PubDate: 2023-08-07
                  DOI: 10.1558/sols.23901
                  Issue No: Vol. 17, No. 1-3 (2023)
                   
              • 'Spaces of multilingualism' Robert Blackwood and Unn
                       Røyneland (eds) (2022)

                • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                  Authors: Mengdi Liu, Songqing Li
                  Pages: 475 - 480
                  Abstract: Spaces of multilingualism
                  Robert Blackwood and Unn Røyneland (eds) (2022)
                  London and New York: Routledge. Pp. 226
                  ISBN: 9780367646899 (hbk)
                  ISBN: 9781003125839 (ebook)
                  Keywords: Book Reviews ; 'Everyday multilingualism: Linguistic Landscapes as practice and pedagogy'
                         Anikó Hatoss (2022)

                  • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                    Authors: Na Xia
                    Pages: 487 - 491
                    Abstract: Everyday multilingualism: Linguistic Landscapes as practice and pedagogy
                    Anikó Hatoss (2022)
                    London and New York: Routledge. Pp 212
                    ISBN: 9780367764586 (hbk)
                    ISBN: 9781003293781 (eBook
                    Keywords: Book Reviews ; Editor-in-Chief’s acknowledgements

                    • Free pre-print version: Loading...

                      Authors: Xoán Paulo Rodríguez-Yáñez
                      Pages: 499 - 499
                      Keywords: Acknowledgements ;
                       
                      JournalTOCs
                      School of Mathematical and Computer Sciences
                      Heriot-Watt University
                      Edinburgh, EH14 4AS, UK
                      Email: journaltocs@hw.ac.uk
                      Tel: +00 44 (0)131 4513762
                       


                      Your IP address: 18.97.14.89
                       
                      Home (Search)
                      API
                      About JournalTOCs
                      News (blog, publications)
                      JournalTOCs on Twitter   JournalTOCs on Facebook

                      JournalTOCs © 2009-
JournalTOCs
 
 

 A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

  First | 1 2 3        [Sort by number of followers]   [Restore default list]

  Subjects -> SOCIOLOGY (Total: 553 journals)
Showing 401 - 382 of 382 Journals sorted alphabetically
Tla-Melaua : Revista de Ciencias Sociales     Open Access  
Tracés     Open Access  
Trajecta : Religion, Culture and Society in the Low Countries     Open Access  
Transatlantica     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Transmotion     Open Access   (Followers: 14)
Transposition : Musique et sciences sociales     Open Access   (Followers: 1)
Travail et Emploi     Open Access   (Followers: 5)
TRIM. Tordesillas : Revista de investigación multidisciplinar     Open Access  
Universidad, Escuela y Sociedad     Open Access  
Unoesc & Ciência - ACHS     Open Access  
Urban Research & Practice     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 23)
Valuation Studies     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Variations : Revue Internationale de Théorie Critique     Open Access   (Followers: 1)
Visitor Studies     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 4)
Vlast' (The Authority)     Open Access  
Work, Aging and Retirement     Open Access   (Followers: 4)
World Future Review     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1)
Zeitschrift für Religion, Gesellschaft und Politik     Hybrid Journal  

  First | 1 2 3        [Sort by number of followers]   [Restore default list]

Similar Journals
Similar Journals
HOME > Browse the 73 Subjects covered by JournalTOCs  
SubjectTotal Journals
 
 
JournalTOCs
School of Mathematical and Computer Sciences
Heriot-Watt University
Edinburgh, EH14 4AS, UK
Email: journaltocs@hw.ac.uk
Tel: +00 44 (0)131 4513762
 


Your IP address: 18.97.14.89
 
Home (Search)
API
About JournalTOCs
News (blog, publications)
JournalTOCs on Twitter   JournalTOCs on Facebook

JournalTOCs © 2009-